9 Tips to Start Writing Your Creative Journal

We keep almost everything inside it, and we only put the real important details on paper. Doing so, we lose track of so many important things. But what to do if you have ideas bouncing around your head, and it feels overwhelming?

It’s better to write them down! Make a journal and get your ideas in one safe place. Following we will show you how to do it!

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Set Your Schedule

The first step to write a journal is to set a schedule. Consider how many times you want to write and set a schedule accordingly. It doesn’t matter if its once a day, or a week. Once you decide a schedule, you need to stick to it. Remember, consistency wins over intensity every time.

Private

A journal is meant to be private. This is a place you feel expressive yourself honestly without a hitch. Keep your journal safe and secure. So device whether you want the journal to digital or pen and paper.

Meditate

Before you write an entry, it will be a lot better if you take some time to reflect before you start writing. So, go to a quiet place and focus before writing It is a great exercise that will help clear your head and get your thoughts straight.

Brainstorm

If you want the journal to be specific, you have to brainstorm ideas. There are a lot of niches to choose from cooking, work, school, job, religion, to your job and aspirations. You can write about anything that interests.

A journal is a perfect place to get your creative juices flowing.

Don’t Forget Dates

Its imperative that you keep every journal entry date. This way you will know when you wrote the damn thing. Chances are, you want to go back to your journal at some point.
If you are using an App, it will automatically add the dates for you.

Title

Title every entry; this will help you navigate through the journal and focus. Don’t worry; you don’t need to title the entry before writing a word. Start worrying about the title once you have finished writing.

Be Natural

When you write, don’t feel obliged to follow a structure or form. Just follow your thoughts. You have to get behind to your train of thoughts and see what kind of work follows.

Be Quick

Do You Know how someone working for an essay writing service work? They never let Writer’s Block get between them and their work. So, you better write whatever comes to your mind. Its hard to stop and start again, so you better keep writing.

Also, don’t think too hard. You shouldn’t be conscious of the words you use. Just keep writing, you can always make sense of them later on.

Be Honest

The journal or its early draft is for your eyes only. So, you don’t have to lie to yourself, be honest. You can be as candid as possible. The journal is a representation of your thoughts and the times you are writing it in.

If you’re interested in creative writing then we have some fantastic news for you today. Neil Gaiman has recently announced that he is to teach his first Masterclass in early 2019 and you can buy an all-access pass now!

Gaiman promises a year of learning, where you can discover creative writing skills from some of the best in the field!Read More

We keep almost everything inside it, and we only put the real important details on paper. Doing so, we lose track of so many important things. But what to do if you have ideas bouncing around your head, and it feels overwhelming?

It’s better to write them down! Make a journal and get your ideas in one safe place. Following we will show you how to do it!

George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series got an enormous boost in popularity after HBO adapted it into the hit TV show Game of Thrones. While the show has outpaced the books, and is set to air its final season next year, fans of the books are still waiting for Martin to finish the sixth book, The Winds of Winter. Read More

Horror trope classics like a masked killer, groups of teens being slaughtered, and an almost guaranteed sequel, are great fun but easily mocked for their predictiveness. Writers Sam Sykes and Chuck Wendig explored a few of those tired horror clichés in an inspired and hilarious way, and the Twitter thread is still, over a year later, entertaining all who stumble across it.

If you are one of the lucky few who have yet to see the magic unfold, here it is in all its glory.

Don’t forget to follow Sam and Chuck on Twitter to enjoy their wit firsthand.

The English language has been trying to trick us for centuries. Homophones are not necessarily homographs, and vice versa. We steal words from other languages, alter some, inexplicably keep others unchanged. It is a wonderful process that ends up with a language that bamboozles and baffles those attempting to learn English as a second (or third or fourth) language.

To be perfectly honest it confounds even native English speakers at times.

Here are 15 examples of when the English language has trolled us very cleverly indeed.

The National Centre for writing relaunches in Norwich this week following a £2 million revamp for the historic Dragon Hall. It was previously known as the Writers’ Centre, Norwich but now the facility is to be a “Physical and digital space to explore the artistic and social power of creative writing, and support the creation and enjoyment of world literature” according to a spokesman interviewed by The Bookseller this week.

Parts of the historic Dragon Hall date back to 1430, meaning any renovations had to be sympathetic. The project was given the go ahead back in 2016 and was backed by a number of high profile patrons including Margaret Atwood, Ali Smith, Elif Shafak, J. M Coetzee, and Sarah Perry.Read More